Method and apparatus for improved storage addressing of video source material

ABSTRACT

A video composition apparatus and method select segments from image source material stored on at least one storage medium and denote serially connected sequences of the segments to thereby form a program sequence. The source material, as it is being stored on the storage medium, has associated with each frame an internal time code. For each storage medium, which in the illustrated embodiment is a video tape recorder, the internal time codes are written in sequential order so that the difference in time codes between two frames corresponds to the difference in time or distance between the two frames on the video tape. When a plurality of different tape recorders record the same frame, the same internal time code is associated with the frame on each video tape recorder.

This is a continuation of application Ser. No. 556,534 filed Dec. 2, 1983, and now abandoned, which is a continuation-in-part to U.S. application Ser. No. 452,287 filed Dec. 22, 1982, which issued as U.S. Pat. No. 4,538,188 on Aug. 27, 1985.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

This invention relates generally to an apparatus and method for composing visual source material. In particular, the invention provides an apparatus and method for dynamically composing stored source material for producing a composition sequence, the electronic data necessary to form the composition sequence, or edited output.

Over the past two decades, video tape has substantially replaced the traditional photographic, e.g. silver halide, and other "non-electronic" film as the preferred media on which to film or compose a movie, news, or other program material. The increasing use of video tape has occurred despite certain inherent limitations associated with video tape in comparison with traditional film. Video tape, like a developed photographic film, is inherently a "serial access" medium; however an editor is unable to "see" the images on the video tape medium. The video editor must instead rely upon electronic apparatus to read and view the images and to compose them to produce an edited product. To the contrary, the film editor is able to have "hands-on" access to the film and can directly view the visual scenes thereon. The film editor can cut and splice the film in the editing room.

The departure from film to video tape has dampened creative talents in some respects, in that the director is no longer able to apply subjective talents directly to the program medium. Instead, intermediate technically-skilled operating personnel are employed to control the electronic composing process, taking orders from the director. The orders are in terms of data, e.g., alphanumeric addresses of different taped sequences, rather than in terms of visual images.

The intermediate personnel thus perform the real time hands-on manipulation of the video tape in an abstract environment of alphanumeric information and work with bays of switches on a complex control panel. The director's feel for the composition process is diminished, and the composing process is, as a consequence, slow and tedious, with lessened subjective interaction.

It is also known that one advantage to composing film media is the ability to react to the temporal nature of the media. Edited film can be browsed back and forth, picked up and viewed, like a book, and physically spliced. These advantages do not yet exist in present day video composing equipment.

Therefore, primary objects of the invention are increasing the throughput in the composing of video source material, lessening or even removing the need for intermediate personnel so that the director is closer and more involved in the composing process, and solving the time-space problem inherent in video tape composition. Other objects of the invention are a flexible composition apparatus and method, and a reliable and user-friendly apparatus and method that can be employed directly, or indirectly, to create automatically a final edited master. Other objects of the invention will in part be obvious and will in part appear hereinafter.

OVERVIEW OF THE INVENTION

Stated broadly, the invention provides equipment and methods for processing image information with improved human interaction. In a preferred practice of the invention, the image information is video images, as conventionally recorded and stored with electronic signals. The equipment and method have many applications.

In one aspect, the video processing equipment according to the invention makes it possible for an operator to scan visually through a vast library of stored video images with greater speed and control than previously possible. This new search capability which the invention provides has many uses. An illustrative one is for a news service to search a video data base for film clips of a subject that has suddenly become newsworthy.

Another aspect of video processing equipment according to the invention makes it possible for an operator to assemble a collection of video images into a program sequence, with a new degree of speed, facility and ease. An example of this use of the invention is to compose a television program from a collection of shots recorded at different times and/or from different sources.

In each application of the invention, the video source material is in the form of groups of frames, typically sequential, as results from filming a scene with a video camera. The groups of frames, referred to herein as segments, can be stored, when received by the equipment, in an unknown or an undesired order. The composition equipment enables an operator to search the sequences of video segments, examine them as desired, and to select portions of any sequences for sorting or reordering, for trimming, and for introducing different transitions from one segment to another--all with human ease, responsiveness, and subjective interaction akin to that of a skilled driver of a performance automobile.

Equipment according to the invention generally employs a bank of independently operable video tape recorders for storing two or more duplicate counterparts of the video source material. The equipment also has several monitors on which the video source material and video labels can be displayed for operator viewing. A video label is, in the context of this invention, a representation derived from a frame of source material. A typical label is a low resolution digital representation of a high resolution source image. Such a label can be electronically stored and accessed at high speeds, yet when viewed by an operator, the label provides nearly the same information as the corresponding high resolution source material.

In one illustrative embodiment of this equipment, there is a first, main monitor on which a selected sequence or other video segment can be repeatedly displayed, as if recorded on an endless loop. A set of secondary monitors can display selected scenes of a video sequence, typically of the sequence being displayed on the main monitor. In addition, there preferably are two linear arrays of passive display monitors. One array is positioned above the other so that each monitor of the upper array is paired with, and aligned above, a monitor of the lower array.

An operator standing or sitting before this video display system controls it with two sets of controls, one for each hand. Each control set has a cluster of finger switches, e.g., push-buttons, arranged with a large wheel for tactile operation with minimal hand movement.

In general operation, the illustrated embodiment of this equipment can include operating modes termed "output", "sort", "trim" and "splice". An operator enters video source material into the equipment, i.e. stores it on the video recorders, with the input mode. The operator can view the video images, typically on the main monitor, as they are being entered. The operator generally controls the equipment to prepare and store label pairs of the source material as it is being entered. The label pairs can be operator selected incoming video frames, or can be automatically selected by the equipment on a repeating basis, e.g., every thirtieth input frame. Each label includes information identifying the corresponding segment of source material, preferably identifying an address where that segment is stored on the video tape recorders.

In the illustrated sort mode of operation, an operator assembles selected label pairs, representing stored video source material, in a desired program sequence. The sequence of the label pairs is independent of the sequence according to which the source material is stored in the equipment.

More particularly, in this sort mode, an operator can select one or more labels representing any stored video segment and place it in selected sequence with one or more labels representing another video segment. Further, the operator can rearrange the sequence of the selected labels. In one use of the equipment, the operator selects a label pair and the video segment which it represents is then displayed with continuous repetition on the main monitor screen while the labels for that segment are displayed on the secondary monitors.

In the trim mode, the operator can shorten or lengthen any selected segment as it is being repeatedly displayed on the main monitor. The secondary monitors in this mode of operation display labels representing the first and last frames of the "trimmed" segment.

When the operator has assembled two or more selected and sequentially ordered and trimmed segments in this manner, the beginning and ending labels of each trimmed segment can be displayed on one set of the passive monitors, in the selected sequence. Further, the operator can collapse two or more of such sorted segments if they are contiguous and represent, as a single label pair displayed on the passive monitors, the plural segments forming the collapsed group.

An operator uses the splice mode of operation to edit the transition between sorted video segments. The equipment in one embodiment of the invention enables the operator to control the length of a transition, the type of transition, the starting and stopping points of the transition, and the number of frames over which the transition occurs.

DETAILED SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

The invention, as previously noted, relates to an apparatus and method for composing image source material stored on at least one image storage medium. The source material is composed of a sequence of stored frames representing a time sequential visual image. Sequences of the frames are associated to form a video segment.

The apparatus, when directing source material to each of a plurality of video recorders, features recording along with the time codes available from the source, an internal time code which is associated with each frame. The internal time code is synchronized from recorder to recorder so that the same internal time code is associated with a frame on all tape recorders. A system clock generator provides the necessary clock and timing signals so that each interface circuitry can provide the necessary time code information. Thereby, the time difference between two frames on the tape recorder is equal to the difference in time codes provided in accordance with this preferred embodiment of the invention.

These and other features of the equipment and method of the invention described and illustrated herein provide significant improvements in the human processing of image information.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

Other objects, features, and advantages of the invention will appear from the following description of preferred embodiments, taken together with the drawings in which:

FIG. 1 is a perspective view of the composing apparatus according to the invention;

FIG. 2 is a detailed schematic block diagram of the electrical circuitry according to the invention;

FIG. 3 is a detailed plan view of a typical console according to the invention;

FIG. 4 is an electrical block diagram showing those elements used for the smooth scrolling display generation and control for the passive display screens;

FIG. 5 is a detailed electrical diagram showing the elements necessary for providing a smooth scroll of the video images across the passive display screens;

FIG. 6 is a partial electrical schematic diagram corresponding to FIG. 2 and showing the elements necessary for displaying and controlling video on the active display screens;

FIG. 7 is a partial electrical schematic diagram corresponding to FIG. 2 and showing the portions of the system which input video to the apparatus;

FIG. 8 is a detailed block diagram of the video tape recorder interface of FIG. 2;

FIG. 9 is an enlarged plan view of a manual control assembly for the apparatus;

FIG. 10 is a flow chart showing controller operation during the input mode of operation;

FIGS. 11A-11F are flow charts showing controller operation during the sort mode of operation;

FIG. 12 is a flow chart showing controller operation during the trim mode of operation;

FIG. 13 is a flow chart showing controller operation during the splice mode of operation;

FIG. 14 is another embodiment illustrating an alternate routing circuitry to that of FIG. 2;

FIG. 15 is a detailed block diagram of a video tape recorder interface as modified for the routing circuit of FIG. 14

FIG. 16 is a more detailed electrical block diagram of the routing circuit of FIG. 14; and

FIG. 17 is a detailed electrical diagram of the cross-point array circuitry of FIG. 16.

DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS General Description of the Apparatus

The illustrated embodiment of the invention is directed to composing image source material stored in a memory medium, for example, video tape used with a video tape recorder, to produce a sequential grouping of segments making up a program or story. In some applications, composition can, but need not, further include the editing function of creating a final edited master. Typically, the image source material either is derived from already existing, production quality video tape(s) or is provided, in real time, from one or more video cameras for recording on video tape.

In its standard format, the video signal has a plurality of frames, each frame having two fields. The video is displayed for normal viewing at a rate of thirty frames per second. When the video tape is prepared, the recording device associates with each field a specific address or identification tag. The address is typically written in accordance with the SMPTE time code, a standard used throughout the television industry. Thus, irrespective of the source of the video material, there is associated with each field of the recorded signal, a unique address or location which is read when the field is read or otherwise retrieved.

Referring to FIG. 1, a video composition system 10 has a control console 12 from which an operator/editor controls the operation of the entire system and provides the composing instructions which enable the system to prepare a listing of video segments to be serially connected to form a finished composition sequence. As used herein segment refers to a sequence of frames. The frame sequence may form a shot, a scene (a sequence of shots), a picture sector (a sequence of scenes), a program or story (a sequence of picture sectors), or any other desired grouping of frames.

According to the illustrated embodiment of the invention, the system employs a plurality of serial storage media 13. The storage media need not be limited to serial storage; however, present technology has not provided a random access storage medium of sufficient capacity and reasonable cost to replace the serial storage medium. In the illustrated embodiment, the serial storage media are video tape recorders (VTR's) such as those commercially sold and manufactured by Sony Corporation under model No. 2500. This VTR operates according to a Beta II or Beta III tape format, has multiple heads for both simultaneous recording and retrieval, provides a times-two and a times-ten or times-fifteen speed control, a frame freeze for both forward and reverse modes, and allows significant remote control capability. Referring also to FIG. 2, the illustrated VTR's, labeled 14, 16, 18, and 20, interface with a computer/controller 22 through respective recorder interfaces 24, 26, 28, and 30. While only four VTR's are shown in the figures, it is contemplated that the system 10 will include up to twenty-two or more VTR's to accomplish the many functions and provide the many features to be described hereinafter. For purposes of simplicity in the drawing, more VTR's have not been shown but have been indicated by the plurality of dots between the various recorders 14, 16; and 16, 18; and 18, 20.

The control of the entire system depends upon the man-machine interaction available from the control console 12. Referring to FIGS. 1 and 3, the illustrated control console has a large main display screen 32 flanked by a plurality of smaller display screens 34, 36, 38, and 40. There are further provided a plurality of yet smaller label display screens 42, 44, 46, . . . , 68, arranged in a two row ordered array. Below the label display screens is a manual control panel 70 which includes a right hand control wheel 74 and a left hand control wheel 76. Adjacent the control wheels are a number of control keys 78, 79, 80, . . . , 99, and levers 100, 101, 102, 103 whose functions are described in greater detail below.

The apparatus 10 also has a keyboard unit 104 having a simplified typewriter keyboard for entering alphanumeric information into the computer/controller 22 and for responding to requests for information or instructions which appear on a display screen monitor 105. In the illustrated embodiment of the invention, the typewriter keyboard and monitor are housed apart from console 12, although the monitor and keyboard could also be integrated with the console 12 as described in copending U.S. application, Ser. No. 452,287. The preferred and described layout of the control console 12 can be changed in accordance the needs of the particular application. Thus, other applications can require a different arrangement of the components and/or different numbers of display screens or other controls.

The apparatus is heavily user interactive. From the control panel 70 the operator/editor can effect substantially any operating mode which is required for composing a video program from one or more available source video tapes. As noted above, the scenes recorded on video tape are made up of a sequence of frames, each frame being composed of two interlaced television fields. The composition apparatus 10, in the illustrated embodiment, is capable of operating upon the frames forming the source video at any of a number of operating levels. According to the preferred embodiment of the invention, each operating level can be viewed as a "bin". Each bin contains a plurality of segments displayed as groups of label pairs, and each class of bins has a separate and distinct purpose. For example, at the lowest or most elementary level, there is a "source bin". The source bin represents the operating level at which source material is read by and stored in the apparatus. At another operating level, there exists a "discard bin." The discard bin, as its name implies, contains those segments which, while once belonging in the source bin, have been "discarded" and removed, for example from the source bin. The "discarded" segments can be later retrieved as described in more detail below.

Another operating level, the so-called "select bin", acts like a temporary scratch pad memory in which the apparatus stores segments on a last in, first out (LIFO) basis. The select bin operating level is useful for moving segments from for example the source bin to for example a higher level bin. The higher level bins, of which there are four according to the illustrated embodiment, are "program bins". It is at the program bin operating level that program material is sorted, trimmed, and spliced.

(In an alternate embodiment of the invention, by way of further example, the operating levels can be designed according to a completely different philosophy. According to one alternate operating method, at the lowest or most elementary level (the zero level), the apparatus can operate upon one frame at a time. At a higher level, the apparatus can operate upon predetermined segments of m^(n) frames where n, an integer, represents the operational level (level "1", level "2", etc.) and m is an arbitrary integer greater than 1. For example, if m equals seven, level one operates upon segments of seven frames, level two upon segments of forty-nine frames, etc.

A predetermined segment, however, will not generally correspond to a shot, a scene, etc. Therefore, the apparatus has the further capability, in this alternate operating level embodiment, of allowing the operator to designate segments of connected frames. At the operator designated levels of operation, the frames, when sequentially connected together, in the most elementary sense form "shots" (analogous to film clips). A plurality of shots (or clips) can be spliced together to form a scene and a plurality of scenes can be spliced together for forming a video sector. Correspondingly, a plurality of video sectors together forms an entire program or story. In this alternate embodiment of the invention, the apparatus operates at any of the levels of shot, scene, or sector as well as at predetermined levels "0", "1", "2", and "3" described above. Thus depending upon the level of operation selected, in the alternate embodiment, the apparatus can operate upon either individual frames (level 0), a predetermined group of frames (levels 1, 2, and 3), or at the shot level (level 4), the scene level (level 5), or the sector level (level 6).)

Referring again to the preferred and illustrated embodiment of the invention, source material read into the source bin, can have segments (or clips) marked off (but not physically divided) in a number of ways. The segments can be designated by, for example, regular sampling, wherein a segment is marked with labels extracted at a repeating predetermined time duration such as one second. Another method employed, according to the invention, for marking off source video into segments, relies upon an operator actuated control panel key which enables the operator to mark off the incoming source material into segments by making preliminary decisions on-the-fly.

In either instance, the composition apparatus 10 uses pictorial labels to designate each segment (or a sequence of frames) of the video material being composed. Thus, instead of forcing the user to manually identify and record a video segment by either the SMPTE time codes or another artificial determination, one or more fields or frames of the segment (preferably digitized frames together with their machine retrievable SMPTE address codes), are employed to pictorially "label" the segment. The labels can be, as described below, the frames at the beginning and the end of the segment. In other circumstances, the labels can be near the beginning and the end of the segment, or elsewhere.

Furthermore, more than one label can be used for a segment. In the illustrated embodiment of the invention, two labels are used, one pictorial label corresponding to the frame at the beginning of the segment and a second pictorial label corresponding to the frame at the end of the segment. (Alternately, one label can be employed during an initial "rough cut" and two labels can be used for the later composition work.) As the segments are assembled, in a desired order as described hereinafter, the labels corresponding to the segments are similarly ordered.

In the illustrated embodiment of the invention the display screens 42, 44, 46, . . . , 68 are designated "passive displays" and are generally employed for presenting a spatial display of the label pairs associated with a sequence of segments, one vertical pair of display screens showing the beginning label (top display) and the ending label (bottom display) of a segment. The video segment associated with a selected one of the label pairs, designated by a control cursor, will typically be displayed on the main screen or "active display" 32. The beginning and ending labels of the segment being displayed on the active display 32 will typically be displayed on various of screens 34, 36, 38, 40 depending upon the mode of operation a described below.

In the illustrated embodiment, if the control cursor, the location of which is indicated by illumination elements 324 and controlled by lever 100, (FIG. 3), were set to the center screen pair of the passive displays, that is, to displays 54, 56, the segment corresponding to displays 54, 56 will generally be displayed on the main screen 32. Further, the apparatus displays pictorial label pairs corresponding to the just preceding three earlier segments on the three preceding vertical display screen pairs, i.e., display pairs 42, 44; 46, 48; and 50, 52. Similarly, the pictorial label pairs corresponding to the next succeeding three occurring segments are presented on passive display screens 58, 60; 62, 64; and 66, 68. Thereby, the control console provides a spatial display corresponding to the temporal image presentation. This snapshot-type multiple label display enables the user to maintain in temporal perspective, where the presently displayed segment on screen 32 "fits" in the segment sequence.

Referring now to FIG. 2, the communications and data management center of the apparatus is the composing computer/controller 22. The computer/controller has a central processing unit which can be for example an Omnibyte OB68K1A, manufactured by Omnibyte of West Chicago, Ill. Associated with the controller 22 is a printer 106, for example a dot matrix printer such as the Versatec V80 manufactured by the Versatec Division of Xerox Corp. The controller 22 further has a digital data bus 107 for transmitting digital data between the computer, a disk controller 108, a picture cache memory 109, a video digitizer 110, a display processing unit 112, and a display processing control 114. The controller 22 is further adapted to receive inputs from the control panel 70 through an interface unit 120. As noted above, the controller 22 is in direct communication with the various VTR interfaces 24, 26, 28, and 30 as well as with video port interfaces 122, 124, and 126. (Interfaces 122, 124 and 126 operate in response to controller 22 for controlling external video equipment, for example external VTR's.) The controller 22 also operates video routing circuitry 130, 132, and 134, and a video effects switching circuit 136. In the illustrated embodiment, the controller 22 operates with a system clock generator 140 for system signal synchronization.

According to the illustrated embodiment, at the beginning of a composing session, controller 22 operates in a default mode, which is an automatic segmenting mode, for dividing "raw video" source material into plural segments. The illustrated apparatus is thus designed to effect a segmentation of the source material according to a predetermined method and sequence. This segmentation process is described above as a periodic sampling process. On the other hand, as noted above, it is also desirable for the operator to review the source material quickly and roughly and indicate his initial feel for the divisions between segments. This operator controlled segmentation function can be implemented in any arbitrary manner, and is described in detail below.

Controller 22 is further responsive to the operator console for providing a storyboard output to printer 106. The storyboard output includes a sequence of labels, generally at a program bin level, which describes the flow of the story. In addition, if textual material had been entered from the keyboard 104 with respect to any segment label, that material is also printed on the storyboard. The operator/editor can then use the storyboard as a "hard copy" guide and aid during the composition process.

Passive Display Operation

Referring to FIGS. 2-7, in accordance with the illustrated embodiment of the invention, each passive display screen 42, 44, 46, . . . , 68 is a 3.7 inch monitor on which a relatively low resolution, 128×120 picture element (pixel) raster is displayed. In the preferred embodiment of the invention, the raster has sixteen levels of gray scale corresponding to four bits of information. In other embodiments of the invention, more or less resolution, both spatially and in gray scale, or color, can be employed.

The digital display data, which represents the pictorial labels, is generated by the video digitizer 110 under control of the controller 22. Digitizer 110 receives analog video input data from the video routing circuitry 130 over a line 143. The video digitizer, which includes a fast A-D converter and a two picture capacity random access memory, stores the digitized video, digitized to four bits, for later presentation over the digital bus either to the display processing unit 112, to a disk storage 146, or to the cache memory 109. Controller 22 controls the flow of digital data from the video digitizer, disk, or cache storage to the display processing unit and is capable of dynamically updating the pictorial labels displayed at the console 12 at a rapid rate, for example, twenty-four per second.

The digitizer, through its computer interface, receives instructions from controller 22 over the computer bus 107. The digitizer is fast enough to grab a frame on-the-fly from an ongoing stream of video information over line 143. The interface can therefore be instructed by the controller 22, upon recognition of the time code location, to trigger upon recognition of the next vertical interval pulse, and the video or video segment associated therewith will then be digitized and stored. The frame time code is used by the apparatus to identify the frame. The digitizer can also digitize a frame displayed in the freeze mode of VTR operation, read its time code, and store the data for future use by the controller.

The video output from the video routing circuitry 130 to the video digitizer is selected and dictated by the signal levels from the controller 22 over lines 142. The video routing circuitry 130 is an EXCLUSIVE OR routing circuitry which takes one of the video inputs (from the VTR's 14, . . . , 16, . . . , 18, . . . , 20, from video input ports 275, 276, and from routing circuit 132) and provides that selected input to the video digitizer over line 143. The selected video input signal can thus be digitized to become available to be displayed as pictorial label. The video input and frame selection process is at least partially controlled, as described below, by the operator/editor at control console 12.

Controller 22 has associated with its disk controller 108, the high speed disk storage device 146. Storage device 146 can be employed, for example, to store all labels of interest so that they can be output to the display processing unit 112 as needed. Since each illustrated passive display screen requires only eight kilobytes of information, the disk controller and disk storage are fully capable of changing all of the displays stored by the display processing unit 112 within a short time duration and therefore provide a great flexibility to operation of the pictorial label presentation.

Even though the disk controller and disk storage can operate with access speeds on the order of ten milliseconds, the retrieval of labels from different sections of the disk can result in a non-uniform rate of change for the passive displays. The apparatus therefore employs the picture cache memory 109, a high speed solid state memory attached to the controller bus 107, for maintaining a fast uniform label change rate. The cache memory typically has sufficient storage capacity for sixty label pairs and has an access time on the order of tens of microseconds which is significantly faster than the access time for disk storage 146. The cache memory operates under the control of controller 22 and receives new label pairs, as needed, from the disk storage 146 under control of controller 22.

The display processing unit 112, referring in particular to FIG. 4, has two identical row processing circuits 150, 152 for driving, respectively, the top row of passive displays and the bottom row of passive displays. Each row processor 150, 152 connects to the data bus 107 and to the display processing control 114.

The row processors are identical and hence only row processor 150 is described. Referring to FIG. 5, the illustrated row processor 150 has a plurality of digitized picture generators 154, 155, 156, . . . , 161. The digitized picture generators are all identical and hence only picture generator 154 is described in detail. Each illustrated picture generator has two picture memories 162a and 162b, a four bit multiplexor 163, a digital adder 164, an offset register 166, a digital-to-analog converter 168, and a memory address counter 170. The output of picture generator 154, which is an analog video signal over a line 172, connects to each of a plurality of analog multiplexing devices 174, 176, 178, 180, 182, 184, and 186. The output of each of the multiplexing devices connects to a respective video amplifier 188, 190, 192, 194, 196, 198, and 200; and the output of each amplifier drives a corresponding passive display for, in this case, the top row of video passive displays in the two row array shown in FIGS. 1 and 3.

The memories 162a and 162b of each picture generator receive picture representing data from the computer bus 107. Each digitized picture generator has in at least one of its memories 162a, 162b, written under the control of controller 22, the data which represents a video picture to be displayed on a passive display screen. The illustrated digital picture has 120 rows, each row containing 128 picture elements thereacross. (As noted above, each picture element has sixteen possible gray levels, meaning that four bits of information are required for each picture element.)

A memory 162a or 162b is read sequentially by stepping the memory address counter 170. Memory address counter 170 connects to both memories 162a and 162b. A memory select signal over a line 201, from the display processing control to digital multiplexor 163, selects one or the other of the memories for reading, leaving the memory not selected available for receiving new data. Multiplexor 113 applies the digital output of the addressed digital picture memory location of the selected memory to digital-to-analog convertor 168 which converts it to an analog signal. Horizontal and vertical synchronization pulses are provided to each picture generator from a common synchronization timing circuit 187 and are mixed with the output of the picture generator to provide full synchronization between all of the video displays. Each memory address counter 170 receives clock pulses from the common timing circuitry 187 so that all eight picture generators are completely synchronized on a pixel-by-pixel basis. Each passive video display screen receives its picture output from a respective one of the analog multiplexing devices. Therefore, each passive video display can receive the analog signal output of any of the digital picture generators. The analog multiplexing devices operate in accordance with signals over lines 187a received from the display processing control 114.

The operation of the row processor can be illustrated as follows. Assume that video display 42, at the left edge of the upper row of passive display screens, is displaying the picture stored in picture generator 154; that video display 46 is displaying the picture stored in picture generator 155, and so on, so that video display 66 is displaying the picture stored in picture generator 160. The picture stored in the digitized picture generator 161 is not displayed and a new picture, to be scrolled, from the right, into the top row of the screen array, is written into its memory. Assume now that in accordance with the operation of control wheel 74, as will be described later, the new picture is to be shifted into the top row from the right, that is, scrolling (or picture shifting) is effected to the left. This is accomplished by directing the analog output which generates the picture, from picture generator 161 to passive display 66, and correspondingly directing the analog output of generator 160 to display 62, the analog output of picture generator 159 to display 58, and so on, so that the analog output from picture generator 154 is no longer displayed on any of the passive display screens. The redirection of the picture generator analog outputs from screen to screen is accomplished by controlling the analog multiplexors 174, 176, . . . , 186, from display processing control 114. In this manner, a picture can be moved from one screen to another; and in fact, in accordance with the embodiment just described, pictures are scrolled, as a whole, from one screen to the next in what would appear to the viewer to be a relatively "jerky" instantaneous change whereby all screens change simultaneously.

Alternatively, it has been found desirable, in connection with the passive display screens, to scroll the video "smoothly" (hereinafter referred to as "smooth scrolling") from one screen to the next. Smooth scrolling refers to that motion wherein it appears as though the pictures were frames of a continuous imaginary film strip which was moved, at a constant rate, behind openings corresponding to the passive display screens (in the described example, the film is moved to the left). Thus, as smooth scrolling occurs, for a spatial extent corresponding to one complete picture, there is a time duration during which image movement occurs to the left, and further during which a single picture image is split between two adjacent screens. In the example herein, the image disappears at the left edge of a display screen and appears at the right edge of the next adjacent screen (if any) to the left.

In accordance with the present embodiment, smooth scrolling takes place in a sequence of eight or sixteen equal steps, each step lasting one television field (that is, one-sixtieth of a second). In other embodiments, greater or fewer steps can be used. The detailed discussion below relates to operation and control of the circuitry for video display screen 42. The other displays screens are controlled and operate in a similar fashion.

Consider now, with reference to FIGS. 1 and 5, as an illustrative operating example, smooth scrolling to the left, in sixteen equal steps, wherein, initially, screen 42 displays the picture stored in picture generator 154, screen 46 displays the picture stored in picture generator 155, . . . , and screen 66 displays the picture stored in generator 160. Initially screen 42 displays one complete video picture. Functionally, after the first "step" in the sixteen step smooth scrolling process, (a) the leftmost one-sixteenth of the picture from the digital picture generator 154 disappears from view in display screen 42; (b) the remaining fifteen-sixteenths of the picture are displayed on screen 42 starting at the left edge of the screen; and (c) at the rightmost one-sixteenth of the screen 42 displays the leftmost one-sixteenth of a new picture from picture generator 155.

The resulting split image presentation is the result of a combination of two separate effects. The first effect is to add an offset count to the output of the memory address counter for all of the picture generator circuits. This procedure, in effect, rotates, in wrap-around fashion, each horizontal line of the display. This first step is implemented as follows. In the illustrated embodiment, each four bit memory word, representing a pixel, is addressed by a fourteen bit address count, the seven least significant bits representing the horizontal position on the display screen, and the seven most significant bits representing the vertical position on the screen. The address "0" corresponds to the top leftmost pixel on the screen. Therefore, an offset count equal to eight picture elements (128 picture elements divided by sixteen equal steps) from the offset register 166 can be added to the memory address count output of counter 170 to offset the picture horizontally and in effect to move (wrap-around) the otherwise first displayed one-sixteenth of the picture (the leftmost portion) to the rightmost one-sixteenth of the screen. This offset is implemented by placing a count of eight in the offset register 166. The output of the offset register is added by digital adder 164 to the seven least significant bits (the horizontal position bits) of the position count. Thereafter, every further increment (of eight) to the count in the offset register moves the rightmost edge of the stored display further to the left by one-sixteenth of a horizontal picture line.

In the illustrated embodiment, when the offset is "eight", a horizontal address count input to the memory 162 reaches the right edge of the picture stored in the digital picture generator when the displayed line is fifteen-sixteenths of the distance across the display screen. The horizontal address input to the memory at this juncture is, in binary: "1111111". The next address count from the memory address counter causes the digital adder 164 to overflow. The carry bit from the adder however is not connected to the memory address counter and therefore the displayed picture "wraps-around" to its stored leftmost portion and the new horizontal address count is, in binary: "0". The left one-sixteenth of the stored picture line is then, absent any other manipulation, displayed at the rightmost one-sixteenth of the passive display screen, such as screen 42.

Since, in this embodiment, each digitized picture generator is displaced by the same offset count and operates synchronously with each other generator, all of the passive displays reach the "wrap-around" point simultaneously. It is at this time, when all displays reach the "wrap-around" point, that the second effect or process step of the smooth scrolling implementation takes place. At the time when the "wrap-around" point is reached, all of the analog multiplexors are switched to a new (the next "higher" in this example) picture generator. That is, at the "wrap-around" point, display 42 begins to receive its video from picture generator 155; display 46 from generator 156, etc., display 66 receiving its video from generator 161. Thus the rightmost one-sixteenth of the picture displayed on screen 42 is the leftmost one-sixteenth of the image stored in digitized picture generator 155. The screen 66 thus begins to display a new picture (from generator 161).

The generation of the second step of the "smooth scroll" is effected by incrementing the offset registers 166 of all of the picture generators to a next higher incremental count i.e., in the illustrated sixteen step embodiment to a count of sixteen. Thus, the video on each screen begins at the second incremental step into the stored picture. This corresponds to one-eighth of the sixteen horizontal picture element distance in the sixteen step embodiment. The multiplexors start each horizontal line in the same "original" state (display screen 42 receiving its video from generator 154, for example), and then switch to a next picture generator seven-eighths, i.e., fourteen-sixteenths, of the distance across each horizontal line. This spatial distance corresponds to the wrap-around point.

The remaining fourteen steps required to complete a sixteen-step smooth scroll are a straight forward extension of this progression. Thus, the offset registers increment to a new count, in the illustrated embodiment, once each frame. The multiplexors switch twice for each horizontal picture line, (first at the "wrap-around" point and again at the end of the line). At the rightmost screen of the linear row array, in this example, there is "scrolled" into view the picture stored, but previously not displayed, in the "extra" picture generator, i.e., generator 161.

If scrolling toward the right, for example, in eight steps, is called for by clockwise movement of control wheel 74, the same procedure detailed above is followed, except that the stepwise movement occurs in a reverse order. Thus, the analog multiplexors first select the "new" picture being scrolled onto a screen, and switch at the wrap-around point to the old image. Similarly, a first offset of, in decimal, "112" is entered into offset register 166, and the offset register is decremented by sixteen each vertical frame time. (Eight steps correspond to a movement of sixteen pixels each step.) Correspondingly, in other embodiments of the invention, more or fewer "scrolling" steps can be chosen to provide a greater or lesser perceived smoothness of motion or speed of movement. For example, if four steps were desired, an offset value of thirty-two (incremented by thirty-two each step) would be entered in the offset register for a left hand scroll.

An advantage of smooth scrolling, aside from the psychological advantage of a less confusing display, is found when the picture data base contains a large number of label pairs. Then smooth scrolling to the right or left gives the effect of viewing a summary of a movie film during film editing. Also, however, stepping the pictures instantly from display screen to display screen (i.e. using the analog multiplexors with an offset of zero) produces the effect, if only one display screen were viewed, of watching a conventional moving picture.

It is important to note that since each analog multiplexor 174, 176, . . . , 186 is independently controlled by the display processing control 114, it is possible to scroll images of some of the displays while leaving other displays unchanged. For example, it is possible to leave the pictures on displays 42, 46, and 50 unchanged and to scroll the pictures on displays 54, 58, 62, and 66 to the left thereby "shifting out" the picture originally on monitor 54. This feature is implemented by maintaining the offset registers for those digitized picture generators being displayed on monitors 42, 46, and 50 set at "zero" (and correspondingly not switching the associated analog multiplexors). The other registers and associated multiplexors are "cycled" as described above. Thus, the analog multiplexors and the offset registers 166 can be independently controlled by the display controller 114.

In accordance with the preferred embodiment of the invention, there is further featured, using the smooth scrolling technique, a method for substantially continuous scrolling in order to locate a particular segment of the video. In accordance with this method, a control wheel 74 or 76 is rapidly rotated a plurality of times to effect smooth scrolling. Since an operator can rotate the wheel at a relatively high rotation speed, that is, many detents per second, when compared to the typical speed of smooth scrolling, the processor 22 stores the number of detent positions passed during the rotation of the control wheel and implements the smooth scrolling procedure to move the label pairs displayed on the passive display screens by that number of screen positions, to the right or left. The operator is then in a position to view the label pairs passing along the display screens. If, as these labels pass by, the operator notes a position at which he wishes to terminate scrolling, he need only rotate the control wheel one detent position in the opposite direction. The controller 22 recognizes this wheel movement as a command to stop the smooth scrolling process. The apparatus then reverts to a normal end of smooth scrolling condition as if the smooth scrolling had come to a natural termination.

In the absence of early termination of smooth scrolling as outlined above, the controller 22 continues the scrolling until the number of positions of movement along the passive display screens equals the number of detent positions of movement by the control wheel. At that time, the passive display screen presentation returns to its normal and stationary one screen-one video frame presentation.

With further reference to FIGS. 2 and 5, as noted above, the picture generator memories 162a and 162b connect to the computer data bus 107 to receive the picture data stored therein. Although the source of the picture data can be either the picture cache memory 109, the video digitizer 110, or disk storage 146, according to the preferred embodiment of the invention, the picture cache memory supplies the image data to the data processing unit. As noted above, this enables a more uniform presentation which is particularly helpful during the smooth scrolling procedure wherein the two groups of memories 162a and 162b are reloaded essentially during an eight or sixteen field time interval (one at the beginning of the interval and the other at the end) in order to maintain a continuing, smooth movement. The memory loading takes place under the control of controller 22. Controller 22 provides the necessary address information to the picture cashe memory and the destination information to the display processing unit for enabling a direct transfer of data from the picture cache memory to the appropriate storage in digital picture memory 162a or 162b. Controller 22 can also implement similar data transfers between the video picture digitizer and the disk controller and storage on the one hand, and the digital picture memories 162a and 162b, on the other.

The row processors 150, 152 in combination with the display processing control 114 can also be employed for a film style presentation, as described below, during the trim and splice operating modes. In the splice mode, for example, a horizontal display of a splice can be effected by independently scrolling the top and bottom rows of displayed images in accordance with the respective rotational movement of control wheels 74 and 76. The top row corresponds to the "from" video segment and the bottom row corresponds to the "to" video segment. By moving the from and to segments relative to one another, a temporal view of the splice can be achieved. The independent movement of the images is created by independently controlling the analog multiplexors and offset registers for each row of passive display screens.

Video Display Processing--The Active Displays

Referring to FIGS. 3 and 6, the illustrated console 12 has the active main display screen 32 and the four subsidiary active display screens 34, 36, 38, and 40. The active display screen 32 is preferably a color monitor. In the illustrated embodiment, these screens receive analog video signals from the video routing circuit 134 and video effects switcher 136. These circuits, operating under the control of controller 22, select video signals from among the real time video signal outputs of the video tape recorders, the video input ports, and the reduced resolution displays from the display processing unit 112. The routing circuit 134 receives the processing unit video over lines 202, of which there is one line for each display screen. The routing circuit 134 and video effects switcher 136 display the video they receive on the various active display screens. Thus, in the illustrated embodiment, those active displays which require the display of a single frame, such as a pictorial label, can employ either the analog video from a VTR operating in a freeze frame mode or the analog signal over lines 202 derived from a low resolution digital raster stored in a memory of the display processing unit.

In the illustrated embodiment, under the direction of the controller 22, up to six video inputs to circuitry 134 are selected for display on the five available monitors. Monitors 34, 36, 38, and 40 each connect to a generally, but not necessarily, different one of the video output lines available from video routing circuit 134. The main color monitor receives a video output from video effects switcher 136 over a line 203. Video effects switcher 136, under the control of controller 22, selects one or the other, or causes a transition from one to the other, of the video input signals over lines 204 and 206, to be its output video signal. In this manner, under control of controller 22, the monitor 32 can display, for example, a continuous loop presentation of a video segment (as discussed further below) or a continuous loop presentation, including the transition, between two video segments. The routing circuitry 134 and video effects switcher 136 can also be employed, for example, to blank all monitors except the main color monitor and to display on it the output of a single video input to circuitry 134.

In the illustrated embodiment of the invention, video routing circuit 134 and video effects switcher 136 are commercially available devices designed to provide the necessary video routing and "effects" functions. In effect, circuitry 134 provides a routing function which chooses from among the various input signals for display of an output signal. For example, circuit 134 can employ seven multi-pole video switches with each being dedicated to one video output. All of the selection circuits receive the same video inputs.

Video Input/Output Recording

Referring now to FIG. 7, the video routing circuitry 132, under control of controller 22, directs one or more of the video signals input it receives over lines 260, 262, and 264, to one or more of the video tape recorders 14, 16, . . . , 20, to the video digitizer, and/or to a video output port 224 (the latter for delivery to, for example, an external device such as a video recorder which is not associated with the present embodiment of the invention). The video input to the routing circuit can be available from a video tape recorder 266, which has associated with it a video interface 268, from a video input port 270, or from the system clock generator 140. Video interface 268 receives clock information, as described in detail below, from the system clock generator 140 and control signal information from the controller 22. Video input port 270 receives video over a line 272 from an external source, and operates under the control of the video port interface 126. The video input port 270 can receive a video signal over line 272 from, for example a video camera. The video information over line 262 can be combined with clock identification signals from the system clock generator 140 over separate line 260. The system clock generator 140 provides SMPTE time code signals for use in the composing process. Alternatively and preferably, in the illustrated embodiment, the capability of providing SMPTE time code data is distributed among the interface circuits 24, 26 . . . , and clock generator 140 provides master clock timing for the apparatus.

The video routing circuitry 132 thus connects a selected video signal from lines 260, 262, 264, and 273 to either a video output port 274, controlled by the video port interface 124, and/or to any or all video tape recorders for recording. And, if necessary, the time code location over lines 260 from the clock generator 140 is also available for writing onto the video tape recorders. This occurs, for example, if the video signals do no already contain the time code information.

The video routing circuitry 132 can employ commercially available devices, and operates as an EXCLUSIVE OR gate with respect to the video inputs and as an INCLUSIVE OR gate with respect to directing video output. Thus, any video input can be placed on any or all of the output lines. The operation of the routing circuit 132 is, as noted above, under the control of the controller 22. The circuitry therefore in effect places a video input signal (including time code information if needed) on the output line or lines as desired for specified operation.

Video Tape Recorder Interface Operation

As noted, a video tape recorder interface is associated with each video tape recorder. This is, in essence, a smart terminal. Referring now to FIG. 8, a typical video tape recorder, for example recorder 14, and its associated interface 24 are shown in greater detail. Each video tape recorder has a video input line 280, a video output line 282, a plurality of status output lines 284, a plurality of controlling input lines 286, a power output line 288, and a clocked input line 290. According to the illustrated embodiment of the invention, the commercially available video tape recorder has circuitry for enabling the output of the video tape recorder to be RF modulated for display on a standard television channel. This is not necessary according to the preferred embodiment of the invention wherein the video displays need not be provided with the RF modulator output required for typical broadcast television. Therefore, according to the preferred embodiment of the invention, the RF output section of the video tape recorder is disabled and an interface "card" as described below, is mounted on the recorder.

According to the illustrated embodiment, the VTR interface 24, which is identical to all other video tape recorder interfaces employed in the illustrated embodiment, has a microprocessor control element 300 which receives digital instructions from controller 22 through an input/output network 302. This provides a distributed processing structure and allows the controller 22 to act more as a remote manager over what can be multiple simultaneously occurring operations. Associated with the microprocessor are a read-only memory 304 and a random-access memory 306. According to the illustrated embodiment of the invention, processor 300 is a Z80 device manufactured by Zilog. The processor 300 receives status data input from the video tape recorder through a time code reader 308 and a VTR status decoder 310. VTR status decoder 310 further includes a VTR control circuitry 312 which enables the microprocessor 300 to control the operation of the video tape recorder. The microprocessor 300 also has access to the system clock through a system clock counter 314. The system clock counter receives an input from the system clock generator 140 over a line 316.

In operation, the microprocessor control 300 receives operating instructions from the controller 22. The operating instructions include, for example, a tape start location, a tape start time, and a tape end location for the video tape recorder. The microprocessor control positions the video tape recorder in response with these operating instructions. The location of the video tape is indicated by the output of the time code reader, which uniquely identifies each frame on the tape. Operation of the video tape recorder can then take place in accordance with the system clock available through clock counter 314. When required, data can be written onto tape, under control of the microprocessor 300, and can include the clock input for providing the time code information.

According to the preferred illustrated embodiment of the invention, one VTR interface writes an internal time code designation in addition to the SMPTE time code which is normally associated with each video frame when it is originally generated. Thus, as source material is being recorded on a plurality of VTR's, one interface for example interface 24 associated with VTR 14, writes an internal time code in association with each frame. The internal time code is sequential and the now modified video being recorded on VTR 14 is also directed by controller 22 to all of the other recording VTR's through video routing circuits 134 and 132. Thus, VTR recording is synchronized so that a frame has associated therewith an internal time code designation which is the same on all recordings.

Further, the internal time codes are recorded sequentially on the video tape and provide an easy procedure for accounting for time durations in response to commands which controller 22 generates. Thus, for example, there are always eight frames between frames "one" and "ten". (The source material comes from different sources and is often prepared at different times. Hence, inevitably there are gaps in the sequence of source generated time codes when the different source generated materials are sequentially recorded on one tape.) Further operation of the video tape recorder is in a standard manner as is well known to those skilled in the art.

General Operation of the Apparatus

In operation, the illustrated composing apparatus is controlled solely from the control console and in particular from the control panel 70 by the control wheels 74, 76, control keys 78, 79, . . . , 99, and control levers 100, 101, 102, 103, (see FIG. 3). The two control wheels 74, 76 are hand operated, rotary controls which allow the manipulation and selection, for example of earlier or later pictorial labels in the sort mode of operation, by counterclockwise (for later) and clockwise (for earlier) rotational movement respectively. These wheels can also effect change of the beginning and end of a segment (the trim mode of operation) or the beginning and end of a transition between segments (the splice mode of operation). Thus the wheels 74, 76 in the illustrated embodiment are active during the sort (wheel 74 only), trim, and splice modes.

The wheels can be constructed of, for example, wheels, three inches in diameter and three-fourths of an inch high and preferably have a finger-sized indentation 320, 322, on their upper surface. The illustrated wheels have thirty detent positions for each complete revolution and provide a signal through interface 120 to controller 22 for each detent movement. The interpretation of one detent of movement depends upon the operating mode. For example, in either the trim mode or the splice mode, each wheel operates to aide in editing the segment represented by a selected active pictorial label, and one detent of movement corresponds to one frame of video. In the sort mode, however, a movement of one detent position corresponds to the shift of all label pairs one position to the right or left on the passive displays.

As outlined above, the composing apparatus 10 operates in a number of operating modes. Entry of the apparatus into and out of the various operating modes is the function of control keys 78, 83, and 89. Each key operates a mechanical switch which signals through interface 120 to controller 22. Control key 83 places the apparatus in the sort or composition mode. Depressing this key, to enter the sort mode, allows the operator to thereafter move and manipulate the label pairs appearing on displays 42, 44, . . . , 68. Thereby, the segments represented by the label pairs can be pulled and inserted, deleted, arbitrarily inserted in various positions, etc.

After an operator has organized the sequence of segments into a desired order, depressing the trim key 78 places the composition apparatus in the trim mode of operation. In this mode of operation, the beginning and end of a segment can be changed, to thereby shorten or lengthen the frame sequence, under the control of, and by rotational movement of, the control wheels 74 (beginning) and 76 (end). The segment however is not actually "trimmed" until both accept key 88 and accept key 99 are simultaneously depressed. In the trim mode, the labels identifying the beginning and end of the selected segment are displayed on screens 34 and 36 respectively. Simultaneously, the selected segment appears in a continuous loop fashion (with a "break" between the end of the segment and the beginning of the next display of the segment as described more fully below) on the main screen 32. As the beginning and end of the segment are adjusted respectively by rotating control wheels 74 and 76, the resulting changes in the segment composition are substantially instantaneously reflected on screens 34 (which displays the first frame of the segment) and 36 (which displays the last frame of the segment). By rotating the wheel 74 or wheel 76 back and forth, there appears in the corresponding display 34 or 36 the "action" portrayed at the beginning or end of the segment. By carefully controlling the rocking motion of the control wheel, the operator can accurately "zero in" on the exact frame at which the segment is to either begin or end. This technique, designated "action scrolling", enables precise decisions to be made with regard to the beginning and end of the segment.

It is further important to recognize that a single 360° rotation of the control wheel corresponds to thirty detent positions in the illustrated embodiment and hence equals thirty frames or one second of video in the trim and splice modes of operation. It is therefore convenient for the operator, without reference to actual time measurement or time code signals, to accurately adjust the duration of the video segment. In addition, however, to further aid the operator, the apparatus provides during the sort and trim modes of operation, on screen 40, the time duration of the segment being edited. The time duration for the segment defined by the label pair on screens 34 and 36 is generated by the controller 22.

Once the operator is satisfied with and finalizes the length of the segments, the splice between successive segments can be changed, if desired, from the abrupt cut, i.e., the default option, which typically occurs between segments. Depressing key 89 places the apparatus in the splice mode of operation. In this mode of operation four different splices can be achieved: key 90 provides for a dissolve, key 91 for a wipe, key 92 for a soft cut, and key 93 for an "ordinary" cut (the default option).

As noted above, the illustrated control console includes two pairs of levers 100 and 101, and 102 and 103. One pair is adjacent each control wheel for convenient lever operation with the hand still in contact with that wheel. All of the levers have seven positions in the illustrated embodiment, although, it may be desirable in other embodiments of the invention to provide for more or fewer discrete positions or for a continuous adjustment or movement for one or more of the levers. Lever 100 controls the position of a cursor: the illustrated cursor has an upper and a lower component for denoting a label pair on the passive displays. The cursor position corresponds to the illuminated ones of illumination elements 324 which appear (in FIG. 3) above the top row of passive displays and below the bottom row of passive displays. Each passive display thus has associated therewith a cursor illumination element 324. The elements 324 thus indicate the location of the upper and lower components of the cursor. Movement of lever 100 generally causes the cursor components to move together from, for example, the display screen pair 50, 52 to the display screen pair 54, 56. The display screen pair selected by the cursor is that display pair which, in the sort and trim modes, designates the segment to be "looped" on main screen 32 and which designates the labels to be displayed in screens 34 and 36. In the splice mode however, the upper cursor component is not above the lower cursor component. Rather, the upper component is offset by one position to the right, and the cursor bottom component thereby indicates the ending label of a first segment and the top component indicates the beginning label of a second segment. There are in addition other embodiments of the invention, as will be discussed below, wherein the cursor control and position vary further.

Lever 101 controls the speed of a splice. As noted above, lever 101, in the illustrated embodiment, is a seven position switch and provides splice speed as a discrete operating parameter. In other embodiments of the invention it may be desirable to provide a continuous splice speed variation. It is important to note also that the speed of the splice can be varied during the transition itself by movement of lever 101 as the splice proceeds.

Lever 102 controls the bin (or level) from which the labels displayed on the passive display screens are selected. As noted above, there are, in the illustrated embodiment, seven different bins (or levels). Movement of lever 102 provides a substantially instantaneous change of bin (or level). Movement of the lever to the right, corresponds to movement to a higher bin (or level). Movement of lever 102 to the left, corresponds to movement to a lower bin (or level).

Lever 103, in the illustrated embodiment, controls the manner of selecting and recording source audio information during the composing process.

Particular Operation of the Apparatus Input Mode

Prior to editing any source material, that source material must be properly input to the composing apparatus. The source material can be, for example, an existing video tape or live video material received directly from a video camera. In either instance, referring to FIG. 7, the source material is routed, by video routing circuitry 132, to at least two or more of the video tape recorders. The primary goal of the video tape recorder storage is to make each segment of the video source material available on at least two separate recorders and preferably ten or more. This allows access times comparable to those obtainable with optical disk media and, as described below, facilitates the display of the segments during the various edit functions. As a result, in the illustrated embodiment, if the amount of source material has a total running time of less than four and one-half hours (a standard VTR tape cartridge), the source material is duplicated on each and every video tape recorder in the system. This simplifies the input operation and decreases the apparatus response when playing a sequence of segments in real time.

The controller 22 controls the routing of the source material through routing circuitry 132. It also controls, in response to control information input through the keyboard 104, the method in which the source material is segmented and in which label pairs are generated therefrom. Thus, as noted above, the source material can be automatically marked for subdivision at a periodic interval, for example every second, specified by the editor. Alternatively, as noted above, the editor can specify the interval marking as the incoming source material is being received. In the latter instance, the controller 22, in response to activation of the mark key, subdivides the incoming material.

In either instance, during the receipt of source material, the illustrated controller 22 collects the label pairs for each segment being recorded. For each segment, the controller 22 generates an "IMAGE" or image pair which includes a digitized snapshot of the frames, typically the first and last frames of the segment, which are employed as the label pair for the segment. Further this IMAGE or image pair includes the precise location of the segment both in the external medium used for input (if the external medium is tape) and in the apparatus video tape recorders. The IMAGES are stored on magnetic disk for later retrieval as required for display and generation of the storyboard.

According to the illustrated preferred embodiment of the invention, the apparatus collects two frames for each segment in the automatic segmentation mode of operation. In other embodiments, however, since the segments are continuous, the apparatus can sample only one frame per segment and that frame becomes the end label of one label pair and the beginning label of the next sequential label pair in the source bin.

The segments of the video material, once they are input to the apparatus and the IMAGES formed therefrom, are represented as PAIR'S of IMAGES. The controller 22 orders the PAIRS into a list as they are created during the input process. This original list, corresponding to the source bin, contains, for each PAIR, the physical time code addresses (both the source time code and the internally generated system time code) of its component IMAGES, the addresses which indicate the previous and next PAIRS within the storage list, and information regarding the edit transition to the next PAIR in the sequence. All of this data is required to completely describe a sequence of segments. This becomes important as the editing progresses and the initial ordering of the source material is changed.

Referring to FIGS. 2 and 7, as noted above, controller 22 directs the input video source material through a routing circuitry 132 to the video tape recorders. In addition, the controller 22 directs the video to routing circuitry 130 for delivery to the video digitizer 110 over line 143. As noted above, the video digitizer operates at a high enough conversion rate to grab a succession of frames on-the-fly. Consequently, the controller 22 operates the system to digitize the first and, if necessary, the last frame of each segment and to provide that digital data for storage on disk unit 146. Additionally, controller 22 provides the disk storage with the necessary location and sequencing data outlined above.

Referring now to the input mode flow chart of FIG. 10, the input of data is specified at 340. The operator then selects either automatic or manual shot (segment) selection at 342 and thereafter the source device, for example, a video tape recorder, is initiated and the apparatus video tape recorders 14, 16, 18, . . . 20 begin recording at 344. Once source material begins to be received, at 346, the controller 22 allocates storage for an empty "PAIR" at 348. The apparatus then grabs an "IMAGE" on-the-fly and stores the image at 350. The first IMAGE of a pair is stored as the starting frame of the new PAIR at 352. A second IMAGE is then obtained at 354 and this IMAGE is stored as the ending frame of the new PAIR at 356. The now formed new PAIR is added to the end of the previously stored PAIR's in the source bin at 358. The illustrated sequence returns to the decision at 346 and the next segment of source material is generated and processed. When there is no additional source material, the system proceeds to stop the recording video tape recorder(s) at 360 and then enters (or continues in) the sort mode of operation at 362.

The operation of obtaining and storing an IMAGE (at 350 or 354) requires, at 369, a signal indicating a manual or automatic designation of the segment. Each designation of a segment, for all but the first and last segments, causes two frames to be digitized, a first digitized frame, representing the ending IMAGE of a segment and a second digitized frame representing the beginning IMAGE of a next segment. The frame is digitized and stored temporarily in the digitizer at 370. An IMAGE is allocated to an empty image storage location at 372 and the actual storage of the digitized frame, and its associated time codes, at that allocated location for the IMAGE occurs at 374. The IMAGE then is written onto hard disk at 376.

The Sort Mode of Operation

The sort mode of operation is the mode to which the system defaults. Referring to FIG. 11A, the sort mode of operation is typically entered from the input mode by pressing the sort key 83. This is indicated at 550. In the sort mode, the controller 22 monitors the control panel, at 552, to determine whether a key has been depressed, a lever has been changed, or a control wheel has been rotated. If any of these events occur, the controller 22 continues through a "checklist" to determine what has been activated at the control panel and to take an appropriate action. If the status of the control panel has not changed, the controller 22 performs (at 554) the other ministerial bookeeping duties which occur during the sort mode of operation (such as control of the VTR's) and returns again to check the status of the control panel.

An important feature of the sort mode of operation is the capability of moving and controlling the location of the cursor whose location is designated by the cursor position indicating LED's 324. As noted above, the position of the cursor is controlled by the cursor position lever 100. During normal operation in the sort mode, referring to FIG. 11A, the controller 22 typically monitors the status of the control lever 100. This is indicated at 556. If the control lever 100 moves to a new position, the sort mode of operation enters a cursor movement control procedure (at 558) as detailed beginning at 670 of FIG. 11B. If the cursor is at the extreme edge of the display screens (at 671), and the directed movement is to a position beyond that edge, as indicated at decision block 672, the apparatus does nothing and returns to its normal monitoring condition as indicated at 674. Otherwise, the apparatus moves the active cursors to the position indicated by lever 100. This is indicated at 676. Typically, the control apparatus operates quickly enough so that lever 100 can move only one position for one cycle of the monitoring system.

If, prior to a left cursor movement, the cursors are pointing to the first pair in a particular bin, that first pair is "dragged" along with the cursor when the cursor moves to the left. Thus, at 678, the apparatus determines if the cursor is at the first label pair of the bin during a left shift, and if so, the apparatus shifts the pair to the left as the cursor move to the left, thereby moving all of the label displays to the left one screen position at a time. This is indicated at 680. Similarly, if the current label pair is the last pair in the bin and if the cursor is being moved to the right, at 682, the apparatus again "drags" the label display with it as the cursor moves to the right. This is indicated at 684. If neither of the conditions at 678 and 682 are satisfied, the new label pair designated by the cursor becomes the "current pair", at 686, and the apparatus returns at 688 to the normal monitoring mode.

Another important operational function in the sort mode is movement of the label pairs to the left and right (scrolling) on the passive display screens. This monitoring step is indicated at 560 in FIG. 11A. The right hand control wheel 74 controls the incremental position of the contiguous sequence of pictorial label pairs displayed, under the control of controller 22, on the passive display screens. Counterclockwise movement of the wheel 74 increments the picture label pairs to the left. As the label pairs increment to the left, in the illustrated embodiment, each spatial position, for example central screens 54 and 56, represents successive, subsequent pictorial labels. Clockwise movement of the wheel increments the picture label pairs to the right wherein each vertical screen pair will represent successive prior pictorial labels. One wheel detent represents one increment of movement for one pair of vertically related pictorial labels (the label pair) in the illustrated embodiment.

Referring to FIG. 11C, the controller 22, when in the sort mode of operation, checks the status of the control wheel 74 (at 560, FIG. 11A) in connection with the scrolling operation of the label pairs across the passive display screens. If scrolling is indicated, the next step at 602 (FIG. 11C) is to determine whether scrolling is to the left or to the right. Depending upon the outcome of this determination, the next or previous pair of the current label pair list for the bin becomes the current label pair and labels of the display are updated by shifting to the left or to the right by one position. This is indicated at 604, 605 and 606, 607. Thereafter, the controller 22 determines, at 608, if the apparatus is in a "split" cursor mode, as described hereinafter, in which case the cursor indicating element that marks the beginning label is updated. The apparatus then returns to the monitoring procedure of FIG. 11A employed with the sort mode of operation.

In the sort mode of operation, the active control panel keys (FIGS. 3 and 9) are the pull key 79, the discard key 80, the return key 81, the home key 82, the insert key 84, the replicate key 85, the mark key 86, the black key 87, the collapse key 94 and the split key 98. These keys generally act upon the pictorial labels designated by the cursor and hence indirectly upon the segment or segments to which the designated labels relate. The physical positions, lengths, etc., of the segments on the video tape however do not change. In the sort mode of operation, the label pairs and at least symbolically the segments to which they relate, can be discarded, moved, marked, and otherwise manipulated into a sequence, designated by the operator, to properly represent a desired program sequence.

For example, assume that the cursor position designated by lever 100 points to the central passive display screens 54 and 56. Initially the label displayed on screen 54 will appear also on screen 34 and the label displayed on screen 56 will appear on screen 36. The segment designated by that label pair will continuously loop on active main screen 32 if the apparatus is operating at a program bin level. If new video source material is being read into and stored on the VTR's with automatic sampling, the apparatus can still enter the sort mode of operation. Upon pressing the sort key, the operator has the capability of manipulating the label pairs already in the source bin as described in detail hereinafter. The operator will not however be able to see a display of the segment on the active display screen 32 as is typical during the sort mode of operation. Thus, this procedure advantageously allows sorting operation to proceed at the source bin level while input material is being recorded on the VTR's. (Clearly, the VTR's cannot simultaneously record input material and at the same time provide video for a continuous loop display on screen 32.)

Further assume, however, that a segment is to be removed (pulled) from its present position in the sequence and inserted at another portion of the program sequence. This pull and insert procedure can be effected as follows. Assume that the apparatus is operating at a program bin level, and it is desired to move the segment identified by the labels appearing on screens 62 and 64 to a position between the segments identified by the label pairs on screens 44, 48, and 50, 52. There are a number of different procedures available to the operator/editor. One method for accomplishing this task is (a) to position the cursor, using lever 100, above and below screens 62 and 64, (b) depress the pull key 79, thereby removing the label pair originally on screens 62, 64 into the select bin (later occurring label pairs move one increment to the left), (c) move the cursor to a position above and below screens 50 and 52, and (d) depress the insert key 84. The originally pulled label pair is inserted into the sequence and appears on screens 50, 52. The label pairs appearing on screens 50, 52, 54 . . . , 68 increment one spatial position to the right (the labels on screens 66, 68 thus disappear from view).

The effect of pressing the pull key is thus to remove the label pair on the screens selected by the cursor from the then existing sequence and place it in the select bin. Depressing the pull key in the illustrated example, thus deletes the label pair originally displayed on screens 62, 64, and moves the label pair originally on screens 66 and 68 to screens 62 and 64, respectively. The next, later occurring sequential label pair, then appears on screens 66 and 68.

Referring now to FIG. 11D, the pull operation outlined above begins at 660. The pull operation at 660 is entered in one of two ways, namely, by depressing either the pull key or the mark key. If it is the mark key 86 which initiates operation, a decision, at 662, directs the controller 22 to save the marked location at 664 and return to the monitoring decision list at 552 of the sort mode of operation. If, however, the pull key initiated the pull operation, the apparatus proceeds to excise the current pair from the bin, at 666, and to store it in the select bin at 668. (If the discard key had been pressed, the pair would have been inserted into the discard bin instead of the select bin.) Thereafter, the label display is updated and the cursor indicating elements, if a group operation had been performed, are changed. This is indicated at 670. The apparatus then returns to the monitor mode of operation.

Depressing the insert key (see FIG. 11E) has the effect of placing the most recently "pulled" label pair, presently available in the select bin, at the position indicated by the cursor and moving all succeeding label pairs, including the one originally displayed at the position identified by the cursor, to the right (later in time) one position.

As an alternative procedure, instead of moving the cursor from screens 62, 64 to screens 50, 52, the control wheel 74 could be employed, after the pull key has been depressed, to move a selected label pair to the location of the cursor. That is, rotating the control wheel 74 three detent positions in the clockwise direction, has the effect of moving the label pair originally appearing on screens 50 and 52 to screens 62 and 64. Thereafter depressing the insert key inserts the previously "pulled" label pair at the required sequential position of the video sequence.

The apparatus, by employing the mark and return keys 86 and 81 respectively, can automate somewhat the more laborious sequence noted above. Thus, in the example outlined, the cursor is positioned at screens 50 and 52 and the mark key 86 is depressed. The cursor is then moved and aligned with the labels originally on screens 62 and 64 and the pull key is depressed. The return key is now depressed and the cursor moves, under control of controller 22, back to the originally marked labels, to passive screens 50, 52, in the example. Thereafter, with the cursors aligned with the labels at which the insertion is to be made, the insert key 84 is depressed.

As noted above, in the illustrated embodiment, the apparatus has a "select" bin which operates in a last in, first out (LIFO) mode. The select bin has an essentially unlimited capacity. (In fact the select bin capacity is limited by the memory capacity of the system.) Thus, the cursors can be aligned with a plurality of different label pairs, according to the illustrated embodiment, and the segments associated with the label pairs "pulled" in a selected sequence. The pull is made each time by depressing the pull key. The effect of repeatedly pressing the pull key (without "inserting") is to successively store, in the select bin, a desired sequence of label pairs for later recall.

After the selected shots have been thus "pulled" and stored, the cursor is aligned at the position wherein the insert is to be made and the insert key is depressed, for example a number of times equal to the number of "pulls" which have been collected. Each depression of the insert key inserts, at the position designated by the cursor, the next "last" collected label pair still in the select bin. Thus, if eight segments had been collected by depressing the pull key eight times at, for example, different positions in the video sequence, the eight collected segments can be inserted into the sequence at any selected position(s) by thereafter depressing the insert key eight times. Because the select bin acts like a LIFO buffer, the effect is to recall and insert the segments so that they appear, at the end of the insert operation (and assuming that the cursor is not moved), in the same sequential order in which they were pulled. This multiple pull collection system can be employed in combination with the mark and return keys noted above, and further can be used in connection with a home key 82 to insert all of the pulled segments at the beginning of the video sequence for a program bin. Depressing the home key, after the label pair(s) has (have) been pulled, automatically aligns the cursor with the label pair representing the first segment of the program bin sequence. The sequence of operation is thus "pull", "home", and "insert". Note that the mark key is not needed.

Thus far, it has been implicity assumed that the pull and insert operation occurs solely within one bin and that the various bins function in an equivalent manner. It is appropriate at this point, to discuss further the characteristics of the several classes of bins and how the pull and insert procedure operates differently in the illustrated embodiment, depending upon the class of the bin. The pull and insert operation can be carried out, as described above, within any of the program bins. The operation however cannot be employed in the select bin which operates solely according to a last in, first out stacking procedure. In the select bin, the characteristic connected sequence of related label pairs, which is typical of the source bin and the program bins, is not present. The select bin, which can be likened to an infinite LIFO storage register, therefore does not permit the pull and insert operation.

Furthermore, the pull and insert operation cannot be employed solely within either the source bin or the discard bin. However, material in either the source bin, the discard bin, or any of the program bins can be "pulled" from the bin, that is, removed from its sequence in the bin, and moved to any program bin by "inserting". Thus, in its broadest concept, a label pair can be pulled from any program bin, or from the source or discard bins, which results in the pulled label pair being stored in the select bin, and inserted, at any desired location in any program bin. The operator moves a "pulled" label pair to a different program bin by operation of lever 102. After placing the cursor at a specified location in the new program bin, for example by depressing the return key to automatically move the cursor to a previously marked location, the insert key is then depressed, and the "last-in" label pair inserted into the select bin is thereby removed from the select bin and inserted at the location marked by the cursor.

Referring to FIGS. 11A and 11E, when the insert key is depressed, controller 22 begins an "insert operation" at 640. The controller, as noted above, retrieves the last added pair (or pair group) from the select bin at 642 and inserts that pair (or pairs) in front of the current pair, that is, sequentially ahead of the label pair at which the apparatus is presently positioned as indicated by the cursor. This is indicated at 644. Thereafter, the label displays are updated at 646 and the just inserted label pair is made the current pair for the labels. Thus, placing a label pair in front of a current pair has the effect of making the current pair occur later in time than the inserted label pair.

The illustrated source and discard bins do not allow the pull and insert operation to occur solely within the one bin, and the apparatus "defaults" to a different mode of operation for these bin levels of operation. Considering first the source bin, according to the illustrated embodiment of the invention, the source bin stores label pairs corresponding to the source video material which has been divided either by machine or by operator into a sequence of segments. Since, in accordance with this embodiment, it is not permissible to pull and insert within the source bin, the operator has two bin related options. The first option allows the operator to designate, through the keyboard 104, a program bin into which pulled label pairs from the source bin are to be inserted. In accordance with this aspect of the apparatus, there is no need to "pull" and "insert"; rather, the label pairs are automatically transferred from the source bin into a designated program bin location when the "insert" key is actuated. In particular, the segments will be inserted in the specified program bin at a specifically marked position, previously designated by the editor. Alternately, as a second option, if no program bin is designated, the apparatus defaults to a predetermined program bin into which pulled source bin label pairs are automatically placed at the "home" position.

The discard bin operates in a manner substantially identical to the source bin. The pull and insert procedure cannot be followed within the discard bin itself; and therefore, the apparatus either inserts "pulled" label pairs from the discard bin at a marked location in a specified program bin, or the label pairs are placed at a machine-determined default option location in a system specified one of the program bins.

The sort mode has a further powerful grouping capability which allows several segments to be treated as one segment. For example, several segments can be grouped or collapsed into a single segment in a single operation. This operation, "segment grouping", is effected by depressing collapse key 94 and the left accept key 99 for fixing the top cursor, thereafter moving the bottom cursor to the right (note that this is the only direction in which the bottom cursor can be moved) using cursor position lever 100. After the bottom cursor is fixed at the desired position, the right accept key 88 is depressed. The result is to collapse into one label pair a plurality of sequential label pairs, that is, to describe a plurality of segments together as a single segment. The top cursor identifies the top (beginning) label of the new label pair and the bottom cursor identifies the bottom (ending) label of the new label pair. Thereafter, the group of segments is treated as a single segment and is represented by a single label pair.

In the illustrated embodiment, segment grouping can only be accomplished if the segments to be collapsed occur sequentially (i.e., are contiguous) in the original source material. This limitation, which is in part a direct result of the method used for describing a segment, that is, using a pointer from the present segment to both the previous segment and the next segment, limits the power of the operation in this implementation. In other embodiments of the invention wherein a more complex and hence time consuming data organization can be tolerated and employed, this limitation can be avoided: one example is to use internal computer bookkeeping to maintain a list of pointers for segments within a segment. It is also important to recall, that since the illustrated embodiment uses serial storage media, it is significantly more difficult to implement, in real time, an arbitrary grouping of segments. If a random access storage media were available, the ability to recall segments in real time, and in a substantially arbitrary order, is much greater and is simpler to implement.

The concept of segment grouping can be further described in connection with the operation of controller 22, with reference to the flow chart of FIG. 11F. Segment grouping can be achieved, as noted above, by first pressing the collapse key 94 and the accept key 99. When this occurs, the apparatus enters the collapse portion of its operation at 620 and first determines whether the accept key has been previously depressed (in which case the starting label pair for the new grouping, would have been previously marked). When the accept key has not been previously pressed by the editor, referring to the decision block 622, the current label pair is denoted as the beginning pair of a new group, (at 624), and the apparatus returns to the normal monitoring mode of operation. When the collapse function 620 is entered after the right accept key 88 has been depressed, that is, as noted above, after the bottom cursor has been moved to identify the ending label pair of the newly defined segment, the controller 22 follows the decision path to the operations indicated at 624. Thus, the first label of the first pair of the group is designated as the starting label for a new collapsed segment; and the ending label of the first segment is changed to the ending label for the last label pair of the collapsed group. Thereafter, at 626, all other pairs in the group, that is all pairs except the current pair, are deleted. The label display and the displayed segment loop are then updated, at 628; and the controller returns to the normal monitoring mode of operation.

More generally, the grouping capability can be extended to all operations. The grouping function is initiated by pressing accept key 99 and the desired function key simultaneously. This defines the beginning label pair of the group. The bottom cursor then blinks and, as noted above, can be moved by the cursor lever 100 while the top cursor stays positioned above the selected beginning label pair so long as that beginning label pair remains on the passive display screens. Using the control wheels, the selected beginning of the new segment can be scrolled off the display screens, in which case a top cursor indicator is no longer lit. Thereafter, the accept key 88, in conjunction with a function key, defines the entire operation to be performed on a group of segments. For example, the accept keys can be employed in conjunction with the mark key to define a display loop which includes all or part of a program bin.

Once the desired program sequence, or a portion thereof, has been edited, the sort mode has a further powerful capability for reviewing a part or all of the edited program, quickly and prior to the time consuming practice of on-line conformation. Thus if, for example, a program must be further shortened or lengthened, appropriate sequences for reediting can be identified quickly within the context of the surrounding program material. The identified segments can then be reedited using the trim or splice modes without requiring the second confirmation as is the current practice.

This review operation is effected by first placing the cursor at the label pair associated with the first segment in the sequence to be viewed, and then fixing it in position by pressing the accept key 99 together with the sort key 83. The bottom cursor component originally associated with the ending label of the first label pair is then moved from a position juxtaposed to the ending label of the label pair associated with the ending segment. The control wheel 74 and/or the cursor positioning lever 100 operate to move the cursor bottom component and the cursor is fixed in position at the indicating element associated with the ending label of the ending segment label pair by again pressing the accept key 88 together with the sort key 83. The program material referenced by all label pairs located between the two cursors will now be displayed on the main monitor screen 32 in a continuous looping fashion until interrupted by pressing the sort key 83.

In accordance with this aspect of the sort mode, the controller 22 determines a sequence in which the VTR's are to present the continuous loop display of the segments identified as described above. The controller thereafter issues the necessary commands to the VTR interfaces describing the time at which a VTR is to operate, the position on video tape at which operation is to begin, and the duration for which operation is to take place. In this manner, the controller 22 creates what is in effect a time sequenced list of commands which determine how the grouped segments will be displayed on screen 32.

The apparatus has further sort mode capabilities for enabling easy and convenient editing of the source material. Thus, the split key 98 causes a segment represented by an identified single label pair, the label pair being the one denoted by the cursors, to be split into halves, or quarters, etc., by pressing the split key one or more times.

The sort mode employs the replicate key 85 to reproduce a label pair, and in effect the corresponding segments, without removing the original label pair from its current location in for example a program bin. Thus, depressing the replicate key causes the controller 22 to reproduce the selected label pair PAIR in the select bin without altering the present location and position of the label pair PAIR in the bin in which it is presently positioned.

The discard key, operating in the sort mode, moves a label pair (and hence effectively the segment to which it refers) from a present location to a designated position in the discard bin.

The apparatus further has the capability of inserting black video, of a predetermined length, at a selected position in the video sequence of any program bin. The black video is inserted at the position indicated by the cursor, positioned by lever 100. Depressing black video key 87 implements this operation. In the illustrated embodiment, a preselected black segment having a length of one second is inserted at the position indicated by the cursor. Longer segments of black can be built up by repeatedly depressing key 87. Optionally, black segments of any desired length can be defined using the keyboard 104 and monitor 105. The black segments are treated like any other segment in the system and can be reduced in time length by operation in the trim mode.

The Trim Mode of Operation

With reference to FIGS. 2 and 3, in the trim mode, entered by pressing the "trim" key 78, the length of a segment can be shortened or lengthened. The cursor position identifies the segment to be trimmed; and, as noted above, the beginning label of the segment appears on screen 34 and the ending label appears on screen 36. The display of the segment loops on the main screen 32. The trim mode, in this illustrated embodiment, can be used in connection with any program bin and with the select bin.

The left control wheel 76 controls the pictorial display on the intake screen 34, and the right hand control wheel 74 controls the pictorial display on the outtake screen 36. The pictorial labels used herein are, as noted above, the first and last frames of a segment. Thus, when the control wheels change the duration (either shorter or longer) of a displayed segment, either at the beginning or end of the segment (or both), the pictorial labels associated with the newly defined segment automatically appear on screens 34 and 36. The original label pair, shown on the passive display screen, does not change. For each wheel 74, 76, counterclockwise rotation causes contiguous frames prior to the then displayed label to appear as a "temporary" pictorial label on the screens 34, 36, respectively, while clockwise rotation causes contiguous frames subsequent to the then displayed label to appear as a "temporary" pictorial label. Each wheel detent, as noted above, corresponds to one video frame. The central display 32 provides a continuous loop display of all the frames from the "temporary" intake label on screen 34 to the "temporary" outtake pictorial label on screen 36. When the accept keys 88 and 99 are simultaneously depressed, the respective "temporary" pictorial labels are made permanent and the new segment definition is fixed. When the beginning and ending of the segment has been so accepted, the new labels describing the segment automatically replace, in the spatial array of passive display screens, the original labels previously associated with the segment. These "fixed" labels can be trimmed again if needed.

In the trim mode, when a particularly long segment is being shortened, it is generally desirable to employ a first rough approximation to the shortened segment prior to precisely trimming it. There is provided, therefore, as the segment is being displayed in the trim mode on the main active screen, the capability of marking the beginning and the end of the segment "on-the-fly". The proposed new beginning or intake of the segment can be flagged by depressing mark key 86 together with accept key 88. Similarly, the proposed new end or outtake of the segment can be flagged by depressing the mark key 86 together with the other accept key 99. This rough cut procedure automatically designates the marked frames as the temporary labels appearing on screens 34 and 36 and allows a precise trim to thereafter, and more easily, take place.

The trim mode of operation described above is called the "video-style" of trimming. In addition, there is a second style of trimming, termed "film-style". To enter the film-style of trimming, the operator presses the trim key 78 a second time. The trim key can be pressed repeatedly to switch back and forth between the two styles of presentation.

According to the film-style of trimming, the controller 22 modifies the display presented on the passive display screens and replaces the label pairs adjacent to the label pair of the segment being trimmed with the frames adjacent the beginning and ending labels. That is, the upper row of passive display screens displays the beginning label (at the cursor position) and the frames immediately preceding and immediately succeeding the beginning label to the left and right of the label, respectively. Similarly, the bottom row of passive display screens displays the ending label of the segment to be trimmed and the frames immediately preceding and succeeding that ending label. The rotation of control wheels 74 and 76 then varies the upper and lower presentations respectively by sliding the respective presentation to the right or left hence moving temporary labels into the selected cursor position. These temporary labels can be made permanent as described above by pressing both accept keys 88 and 99.

Referring now to FIG. 12, when the trim key 78 is pressed, the apparatus enters the trim mode at 800 and controller 22 first moves the various video tape recorders to the initial locations for digitizing frames centered around the beginning and ending labels of the PAIR denoting the displayed segment. This is performed at 802. Typically, the controller 22 positions the video tape recorders at positions approximately sixty frames ahead of the beginning and ending labels, and then operates the VTR's to digitize and store a "window" of approximately sixty frames before and after the beginning and ending labels. This is indicated at 804. Thereafter, if the apparatus is in the film-style display mode, a set, comprising fourteen of the collected digitized frames centered around the beginning and ending labels, is displayed on the passive display screens as outlined above. This is indicated at 806. On the other hand, if a video-style trim is to take place, the collected frames are displayed on the active monitors as described previously. The operator can then adjust the beginning and ending labels, as indicated at 808, while the controller responds thereto and continues to loop the segment defined by the cursor on the main display screen. If the current temporary labels are acceptable, they are stored as new images in the PAIR that was being trimmed. This is indicated at 810. If, however, the current temporary label is not acceptable, that is, the accept keys have not been pressed, the controller 22 loops back to redo, if required, those temporary labels. This decision point is indicated at 812. Once the new labels are accepted, the apparatus automatically returns to the sort mode of operation at 814.

In the film-style presentation, the apparatus advantageously highlights the labels as follows. In the upper row of labels, those labels which represent frames to the left of the cursor indicated position are dimmed while those labels, including the label at the cursor indicated position, which represent frames after, in time, the currently displayed beginning label, have a brightened display. Thus, the brightened labels represent the beginning of the segment, starting with the beginning label frame and including those later frames available for selection as the beginning label. Similarly, the dimmed labels of the upper passive display row represent frames which occur prior to the present beginning label. Correspondingly, in the lower row of passive display screens, the labels representing frames prior to and including the present ending label are brightened and the screens representing frames which occur after, in time, the present ending label are dimmed. As a result, the pictorial display shows in brightened labels those frames which form the beginning and ending portions of the looping segment, and shows in dimmed labels, those frames which are outside of the looping segment.

The Splice Mode of Operation

In the splice mode, entered by depressing the transition key 89, controller 22 displays two segments of video in connected sequence. The segments are selected under cursor control, and the cursor position is selected prior to entering the splice mode. Upon entering the splice mode, the cursor automatically splits, the upper cursor component moving one spatial position (or screen) to the right of the bottom cursor component. The two segments associated with the respective label pairs are played in time sequence on the main screen 32 to display the splice.

The splice display presentation on the main screen requires at least two video tape recorders, one recorder for the "from" segment and the other recorder for the "to" segment. Thus it is transition between two contiguous label pairs which is being edited. Screen 32 displays the transition sequence in a continuous loop presentation from the video recordings available from the VTR's. Screens 40 and 34 display the transition label pair, made up from the end label of the label pair of the first transition segment, this end label being the first label of the transition label pair, and the beginning label of the label pair associated with the second transition segment, this beginning label being the second label of the transition label pair.

Screen 32 displays the output of the first VTR before the transition followed by the output of the second VTR after transition. Further, in the illustrated splice mode, as in the trim and sort modes, a loop interruption delay, for a "psychological break", is advantageous and controller 22 provides the delay before the first segment of the transition is rerun, that is, before each repeat display of the two segments.

Some transitions, such as an overlapping fade-out fade-in transition or a wipe, will require an overlap of two successive segments. During the overlap time, the video effects switcher 136 employs portions of the outputs of both the first segment VTR and the second segment VTR to generate the display for screen 32. The default option, in this case, according to the illustrated embodiment, assigns as the first label of the transition label pair that frame of the first segment at which the "from" segment ends, and the second label of the transition label pair is that frame of the second segment at which the "to" segment begins. The transition label pair thus defines the transition point. The control wheels 74, 76 control the shifting and marking of the transition labels in the splice mode in a manner corresponding to the trim mode. The acceptance of the new transition labels is indicated by simultaneously pressing the two accept keys.

The initial beginning and end of the transition is automatically preset by the apparatus when the operator/editor depresses one of the transition selection keys 90, 91, or 92. For example, when the dissolve key is pressed, the length of the dissolve is determined by the transition speed lever 101 and can vary between for example 15 and 105 frames, in fifteen frame increments. Preferably, the range of variation can be changed at the keyboard terminal. Further, the default option of the dissolve transition is timed to begin at the first label of the transition label pair and to proceed for its set length. However, an operator can alter this default option using the keyboard so that the transition either ends at the ending transition label or has its length split equally between the beginning and ending transition labels and about the transition point.

Similarly, the wipe key causes the transition to be one of seven preselected "wipes". The wipes are selected by repeatedly pressing the wipe key while the transition speed lever 101 is at the center position. The seven wipes can be selected from among the available SMPTE standards 0-24 through the keyboard. The length of the transition is set by the transition speed lever. The length can be, for example, 30, 20, or 10 frames left to right, or 10, 20, or 30 frames in the reverse direction. The keyboard can be employed for determining the transition length.

The soft cut key 92 selects a short dissolve and performs like the dissolve key except that the default speeds are significantly less, for example 2, 4, 6, . . . 14 frames. Similarly, the cut key causes the transition to be a cut which can be considered an extreme of a dissolve wherein the dissolve has zero length.

Lever 101 thus provides the operator with the flexibility of controlling transition speed, even during transition.

In summary, during the illustrated splice mode of operation, controller 22 operates the routing circuitry 134 (FIGS. 2 and 6) so that displays 40 and 34 show the freeze frame pictorial labels representing the temporary transition label pair currently being viewed. The freeze frame video is available to routing circuitry 134 from either a VTR operating in the freeze frame mode or, preferably, from the stored digitized pictures in cache memory. Further, displays 38 and 36 can, if desired, display the output of the "first" and "second" video tape recorders respectively both before and after the transition point. The outputs displayed on screens 36 and 38 therefore show the "from" segment after the transition point and the "to" segment before the transition point.

As noted above, controller 22 provides, in response to the keys 90, 91, 92, special transition effects between two segments. The transition between two segments in accordance with the fade-in fade-out, wipe, dissolve, etc. procedures, correspond to those standardly used on commercial television, and controller 22 provides these effects using the video effects switcher 136. In this manner, special transition effects can be inserted into the program material by the operator through the console 12.

Referring to FIG. 13, the controller 22, during the splice mode of operation, first queues the video tape recorders for collecting frames images for digitization, storage, and possible later display. Thus, the video tape recorders are initialized at 850 to a location in advance of the transition point, for example, about sixty frames in advance thereof, for each segment. Thereafter, the frames adjacent the transition point for both the "to" and "from" segments are digitized, at 852, so that the apparatus has in storage the digitized frames which can form a new transition point. Thereafter, controller 22 scans the special effects transition keys 90-92, as indicated at 854. If one of the keys has been pressed, that selected transition is processed by the controller 22 using the special effects switcher 136. This is indicated at 856.

The controller 22 next presents the frames for display either in the film-style display on the passive display screens or in the video-style display on the active display screens, and in either case, concurrently loops the transition on the main display screen. This is indicated at 858. (As described in connection with the trim mode of operation, repetitive pressing of the splice key causes the controller 22 to switch between the video-style presentation and the film-style presentation.) The transition point can be changed, at any time, by using the control wheels 74, 76 to designate a temporary transition label pair, and hence a temporary transition point. When a temporary new transition point has been accepted, at 860, by pressing the two accept keys, the temporary transition labels are made permanent, at 862, and the labels are stored and the transition PAIR is updated. The controller then returns to the sort mode of operation at 864. If the temporarily selected labels are not accepted, the controller 22 continues to loop the system until an acceptable transition sequence is adapted (or the splice mode is otherwise exited). Thus, while not shown in FIG. 13, the editor can leave the splice mode of operation by pressing the trim or sort keys, leaving whatever permanent selections have been made intact, and otherwise defaulting to the conditions under which the splice mode was entered.

In the splice mode of operation, when the film-style presentation is employed, the passive display screens have different brightnesses to better illustrate the present transition. In particular, in the upper row of screens, the pictured frames to the left of the cursor-indicated frame are dim while the cursor-indicated frame and those frames to its right are bright. Thus, the bright frames indicate those frames which form part of the transition and which occur at and after the transition point. The dim frames represent those frames occurring prior to the transition point. Correspondingly, in the lower row of screens, those frames occurring to the left of and including the cursor-indicated transition label are bright, while those frames occurring to the right of the cursor-indicated label are dim. Thus, the screens which are bright represent the flow or sequence of frames into and through the transition point.

System Operation

In typical operation of the illustrated embodiment, the apparatus repeatedly displays a single segment in the sort mode as follows. Two video tape recorders, which contain identical copies of the segment, are each initially positioned at a location in advance of the segment. Referring to FIG. 6, data, provided by the controller 22 to each video tape recorder associated interface, designates both a start time and a start position, as well as an ending position, for each recorder. At the earlier start time, which is referenced to the system clock generator 140, one of the video tape recorders begins to provide video signals to the routing circuitry 134 and hence to the video effects switcher 136. Controller 22 directs the selected video to the main display 32. At a time prior to the end of the segment being displayed, the second video tape recorder begins operation in accordance with timing and position instructions previously received from the controller 22. At the end of the segment display provided by the first tape recorder, the video effects switcher changes the source of the signal connected to screen 32 from the first tape recorder to the second tape recorder, (both signals being available to it over lines 204, 206), the timing being such that the second tape recorder, already up to speed, just begins the segment to be displayed at the transfer time. Video effects switcher 136 thus switches from the first tape recorder, over for example line 204, to display the beginning of the segment coming from the second tape recorder over for example line 206. (The timing is changed if a "psychological delay" is inserted between successive segments. In that instance, controller 22 varies the timing to the second tape recorder so that it begins to play just after the delay time. A third VTR can be employed by controller 22, and its output selected, during the delay time.) Alternately, the presence of a "psychological delay" between the display of successive repeating segments can eliminate the need for the second tape recorder so that a single tape recorder can be rewound and restarted prior to the end of the psychological delay time. In that instance, the apparatus can employ one VTR. Note however, if the segment being displayed is relatively lengthy, the rewind time could exceed the allotted psychological delay time. In this instance, either two tape recorders would be employed or the psychological delay can be lengthened to allow the VTR sufficient rewind time.

As the second recorder operates and provides video to screen 32, the first tape recorder stops and rewinds to a position before the beginning of the segment so that at the end of the segment then being displayed from the second tape recorder, the first tape recorder will be ready to display the segment again. This sequence of operations can provide a continuous non-interrupted loop (or as noted above, an interrupted loop) repeating the selected video segment.

In addition to the display on screen 32, screens 34 and 36 receive, through routing circuitry 134, the pictorial labels associated with the then current segment. These labels are provided under the control of the controller 22, either from other video tape recorders operating in a freeze frame mode, from the display processing unit 112 over lines 202, or from storage such as the cache memory.

The Control Panel

The composing apparatus, whether it operates in the sort, trim, or splice modes requires substantial hand and eye interaction. In particular, the operator/editor must inevitably watch not the hand controls but the various video screens in front of him to make the necessarily precise decisions with respect to sorting the source material, moving it from bin to bin, trimming it, and effecting transitions from segment to segment. The control panel thus has a configuration to provide significant tactile feedback to the operator so that, without looking at the manual controls, the operator has a full understanding, gained through use, of where the various keys and levers are located.

Referring now to FIG. 9, which is an enlarged view of the control wheel 74 and its associated keys and levers, the key structural configuration has plural structural subconfigurations for providing positive tactile feedback which enables the operator to select the proper keys without actually looking at them. An upper 400 and a lower 402 exterior region provide respectively automatic positioning for the fingers with regard to keys 78, 79, and 84 (upper region 400) and keys 87, 82, and 83 (lower region 402). Furthermore, the middle keys, keys 79, 80, 81, and 82 have a structure wherein two keys have a longer lateral reach (keys 79 and 82) and two keys have a shorter lateral reach (keys 80 and 81). These keys, having different lateral reaches, define interior upper 404 and lower 406 regions of tactile stimulation which provide positive positioning feedback with respect to the interior keys in the row, adjacent wheel 74. The remaining keys, keys 85 and 86, are automatically referenced with respect to the known keys surrounding them. As a result, all of the elements of the hand operated composition control panel are locatable without visual confirmation.

Note also that keys 78 and 83 have a shorter lateral extent than keys 79 and 82 or keys 80 and 81 to provide a yet further positive tactile stimulation feedback regions 408 and 410. In addition, the short lateral extent of keys 80 and 81 enables a space to be developed between control wheel 74 and keys 80 and 81 to provide a further internal feedback region 412.

Another non-visual feedback parameter, as noted above, is the number of detent positions specified for a full 360° rotation of control wheel 74 (or 76). A complete revolution, thirty detent positions, corresponds to one second of video in the trim and splice modes. This enables the operator to easily and accurately increase or decrease the length of a segment without looking at the control panel. The relatively isolated location of the accept switches 88 and 99, and of the levers 100, 101, 102, and 103 described in detail above, enables an operator to find and use these manual elements without visual confirmation. Thus, the structural configuration of the manual controls permits the operator to maintain visual contact with the video displayed on the screens while tactile feedback from the manual controls substantially eliminates the need for visual confirmation.

In an alternate illustrated embodiment for controlling the flow of video (and audio) signals according to the invention, elements corresponding to elements of FIGS. 1-9 have been designated by the same reference numbers, and elements which have been modified, but still closely resemble functionally elements of FIGS. 1-9, have been designated with a like reference number including a "'", for example 24'.

Referring to FIG. 14, a alternate flexible routing structure features a video/audio bus 500 wherein each video signal and each audio signal is assigned to a distinct transmission path, here a transmission wire pair. Further, each element requiring a signal from or connecting to the bus 500 makes connection through a routing circuit 502a, 502b, . . . 502s. Each routing circuit in this illustrated embodiment is identical to each other routing circuit except that each routing circuit has a different address and is hence addressable, directly or indirectly, from, for example, the controller 22. Each routing circuit operates to connect any line of the bus 500 to an associated operating station under the direct or indirect control of controller 22 and to connect a line of an operating station to its assigned bus line.

Referring now to the video tape recorders, each video tape recorder connects to a video tape recorder interface and to a routing circuit. The video tape recorder interface is similar to that interface described in connection with FIGS. 2 and 8 and is modified therefrom to accommodate the routing circuit, that is, to provide control for the associated routing circuit over the video (and audio) signals connected between the video tape recorder and the routing circuit (FIG. 15).

In a substantially similar manner, the video effects switch 136, the video input port 276, the video input port 275, the video output port 274, the video tape recorder 166, the video input port 270, the video digitizer 110, the display processing unit 112, and the video display screens 32, 34, 36, 38, and 40, each have associated therewith a routing circuit for making available to the particular operating station any of the video signals on bus 500 and making available to the assigned bus paths of bus 500, any video signals emanating from the operating station. In addition, there is illustrated in FIG. 14, an audio effects switch 504. This switch allows the audio signal to follow the video signal. The switch can be obtained commercially and operates in response to and under control of the controller 22 to modulate and switch audio signals available from bus 500.

Referring to FIG. 15, a typical modified VTR interface circuit 24', corresponds substantially to the circuit of FIG. 8 with the addition of a routing control circuit 510. Routing control circuit 510 connects to the control processor 300 and receives from processor 300 address and routing bus identification signals which are stored in circuitry 510 and are provided to the routing circuit 502a. Circuitry 510 comprises a plurality of latches which store data from control processor 300, the data including the specific address of the routing circuit 502a and the specific connections between the VTR inputs and the routing bus 500. The processor 300 receives the instruction data from the controller 22. In this illustrated embodiment of the invention, the video tape recorder receives from the routing circuit a video input over a line 280', and audio inputs over lines 512 and 514. Similarly, the video tape recorder provides to the routing circuit, a video output over a line 282' and audio outputs over lines 516 and 518. In other respects, the operation and configuration of interface circuits 24 and 24' are the same.

Referring now to FIG. 16, each routing circuit 502 has a video section 520 and an audio section 522. In the video section, the video, for example from a VTR over line 282', connects directly to the assigned bus path of the video bus portion of the routing bus. The internal connection is illustrated by the dashed line 524. Similarly, the audio inputs from for example a VTR over lines 516 and 518, connect directly to assigned lines of the audio bus portion of the routing bus as indicated by dashed internal connection lines 526 and 528, respectively. More or fewer direct internal connections can be employed.

Each section of the routing circuit 502 employs a cross-point switch array, 530 and 532, for connecting any audio or video line of the routing bus to the inputs of an operating station, such as a VTR video input. The cross-point switch arrays 530 and 532 receive control signals from a VTR interface over lines 534. Lines 534 reflect for example the outputs of the latch element of circuitry 510.

Referring now to FIG. 17, each cross-point circuit array 530, 532, receives the control signals over lines 534. The arrays 530, 532 function substantially identically, and only array 530 shall be described in detail. If the address on the control lines matches the address present in an address decode and latch circuitry 540, the circuitry 540 latches and stores the signals input over lines 534. Those signals designate the bus line which is to be connected to the output line(s) of the array, for example to line 542. The output of the address decode and latch circuitry 540, over lines 544, represents the instruction portion of the control data and acts to control an N:1 decoding circuit 546. Decoding circuit 546 provides an enabling output over one of its "N" output lines corresponding to the instruction input over lines 544.

Each output line of the decoder 546 actuates one of a plurality of switch elements 548 to a pass through state. Each switch element 548 is a gate controlled analog switch which in one state (the actuated state) passes the signal on its analog input line and in its other state blocks that signal. The outputs of the switches 548 have a common connection to the output line 542 of the array. Thus, a selected one of the bus input lines can be provided to the output line 542. The operation of circuitry 532 is substantially identical to that of circuitry 530 with the exception that two groups of switch elements 548 and two corresponding decoders 546 are provided, one for each channel of audio being provided to the video tape recorders. Correspondingly, the address decode and latch circuitry of circuitry 532 can have additional latch registers to store the data which designate the switch(es) of the switch arrays to be actuated.

With respect to routing elements not connected to one of the VTR's 14, 16, 18 and 20, a single interface element 268' has therein sufficient output capability to address and control each of the remaining routing circuits. Thus, referring now to FIG. 14, the interface 268' is similar to a modified VTR interface, such as interface 24'; however, its processor 300 is capable of receiving address and instruction data relating to several routing circuits and of directing that data to routing control circuitry 510 to provide over lines 505 address and instruction data signals for controlling the routing circuits 502e-502s. The interface 268' thus corresponds to the interface of FIG. 15 except that the circuitry 510 connects no longer to a single cross-point routing switch array circuit but to a plurality of them. Similarly, as noted above, the control processor 300 receives data from the controller 22 relating no longer to one routing circuit but to a plurality of routing circuits. The output of the circuitry 510 has both address and data information. The address information addresses a particular routing circuit 502e-502s; and the addressed routing circuit then latches within it, using the latches of elements 540, the data which designates the connection between the bus 500 and the associated operating station.

As noted above, the routing bus 500 has both video and audio channels therein. The video portion of the channel, designated 500a, and the audio portion of the channel, designated 500b, together comprise a single multiwire channel, in the illustrated embodiment, preferably a two hundred line flat wire bus which connects to each of the routing circuits 502. Thus, in accordance with this second illustrated embodiment of the routing system, each operating station can receive the video and audio available on any of the channels of the bus.

The video composing method and apparatus described herein provide the user with great flexibility in manipulating and editing the video source material. The assembled material can be collected from many sources, in any order, for assembly and editting to form a finished program. Furthermore, after assembling his story, the user can go back and further edit the shots and scenes as required. He can resequence scenes and shots, adjust their length, or the transitions therebetween, just as he had done during a previous composing session. This recomposition process can continue with as many iterations as required without any loss of flexibility until the assembled material is satisfactory.

It is also important to realize that even though one considers the editing process as the editing of the source material, the source material is typically not disturbed after recording on the composing apparatus VTR's. Instead, it is the label pair representations, and not the segments, which are moved, changed, etc.; and it is the storage of the labels as PAIRS of IMAGES which further provides great flexibility and power to the apparatus.

Since the composition process always has available unmodified copies of the source material as its reference, rather than second or third generation partially composed material, the editor/operator can always reinsert shots or scenes previously deleted or add completely new shots from the original source material or, from direct video input ports by receiving signals from external devices such as video cameras or remote feeds. The editor can even compose multiple versions of the same story using a single set of source materials (and the plural program bins) and decide at a later time which one to use for final release.

When the composition is complete, the apparatus and method will produce a complete program package for news and/or an edit confirmation list in machine readable form (for programs) that can be used by conventional computer controlled on-line editing systems. This implementation can be accomplished with remote autoconfirmation with little or no operator intervention. In the illustrated embodiment, the system will also drive 3/4, 1, and 2 inch tape transports directly as external interfaces, through interface 124, under the control of controller 22, to provide full on-line editing capability.

Additions, subtractions, deletions, and other modifications of the invention will be obvious to those practiced in the art and are within the scope of the following claims. 

What is claimed is:
 1. Apparatus for composing image source material stored on a plurality of video tape recorders, said source material being composed of a sequence of stored frames representing a time sequential visual image, sequences of said frames being associated to form a video segment, said composing apparatus comprising:means for directing said source material to each of a plurality of video recorders; a plurality of video recorder interface circuitries, each of said plurality of recorders connected to a said interface circuitry; a system clock generator to each interface circuitry; and each interface circuitry further having: means for writing an internal time code associated with each frame being recorded on its connected video recorder: each said time code, when combined with other time codes, representing sequential addresses such that the number of frames between two frames can be identified; and said interface circuitries and said system clock generator being connected so that the same video source frame, when written on different video recorders carries with it the same internal time code identification.
 2. The composing apparatus of claim 1 further wherein said writing means comprises:means for writing a frame sequential time code wherein the time between two frames written on a video tape recorder is determined by the difference in internal time codes associated with said respective frames.
 3. A method for composing image source material stored on a plurality of video tap recorders said source material being composed of a sequence of stored frames representing a time sequential visual image, sequences of said frames being associated to form a video segment, said composing method comprising the steps of:directing the source material to each of a plurality of video tape recorders; connecting each of a plurality of video recorder interface circuitries to a said video recorder respectively; providing a common system clock to each interface circuitry; writing an internal time code associated and each said frame and recording said time code along with the frame on the video recorder; each said time code, when combined with other time codes, represent sequential addresses, and synchronizing said interface circuitries and said system clock so that the same video source frame, when written on different video recorders, carries with it the same internal time code identification.
 4. The composing method of claim 3 further comprising the step of:determining the number of frames between two frames on a video tape recorder by the difference between the internal time codes associated with each said frame. 